How to Watch Blocked Internet Videos

The internet is a great place to catch TV shows and clips that you or your PVR missed.

Unfortunately, a lot of websites only allow their video content to be viewed in their service area. It’s not because they’re mean, they may have contracts that prevent them from distributing outside their area, not to mention cost savings reasons.

That’s right, it’s expensive to stream video over the internet to thousands or hundreds of thousands of people in a reliable way. You need a lot of servers and bandwidth, both of which are expensive, especially in large quantities. If a broadcaster only services one country, they’re not likely going to spend money to reach customers outside of their service area, although they may allow it if there are no restrictions of that nature in their distribution contracts.

Secondly, they may not be allowed to broadcast outside of their broadcast area. Broadcasters buy distribution rights for the shows and other content that they air. These distribution rights are usually sold by country. That means a broadcaster who buys the rights to air a show in the US is not allowed to distribute that show over the internet to another country since they have not bought the distribution rights required to broadcast in that country. In fact, another broadcaster in that country likely has paid for the rights to broadcast that same show there.

There are also legal agreements with members of various guilds and unions that may prevent content from being distributed in certain areas or for a finite time after the original air date.

Broadcasters can identify which country you’re in when you access their website. They use various methods to determine your location, but the most popular is something called Geo-IP look up. Basically, when you navigate to their website, the network address of your computer is sent to the web server. They can look up that address in a database to see the country that address is registered to. This method is accurate most of the time and in some cases they can actually narrow down the part the city that you live in.

Although there may be legal and ethical issues with it, there are ways to circumvent some of the methods that are used, potentially allowing you to view content from outside their intended region of distribution. These methods may be illegal in your country, so verify the legality of it before doing so.

I think there is at least one ethical use for circumventing regional lockouts. For example, I was in Canada a couple weeks ago and I wanted to catch up on one of my favorite shows. I normally watch the show on network TV and all of the advertising is relevant to me. I wasn’t able to watch videos on the broadcaster’s website from Canada, so I could have used the following method to make it work:

In Firefox, Go to “tools” > “Add-ons” and click on the “Preferences” button for the Modify Headers add-on.

Click on the “Headers” tab at the top.

Then enter: “X-Forwarded-For” in the “Header name” input box (without the quotation marks).

Enter one of the following IP addresses in the “Header Value” input box (without the quotation marks, and choose the country where the content is accessible from)
USA – 12.13.14.15
Canada – 207.245.252.27
UK – 193.35.131.194

Select “Add” from the “Selection action” drop down.

Enter the country name in the “Descriptive comment” input box.

Click “Add”.

Now select the one you just added in the list and then click the “Enable/Disable” button. You should see a green circle next to it, indicating it is enabled.

Close the Modify Headers box, restart the Firefox browser and visit the intended website.

I should note some websites that the above method does not work for:

cbs.com

cwtv.com (the CW)

hulu.com

sho.com (showtime)

tnt.tv

There are at least four times that many sites that DO work, although I’d rather not single them out for legal reasons. There are also a few other methods, but this is by far the easiest to setup and use. If you have IP addresses for other countries, let me know and I’ll add them.

Also, it takes a lot of people and money to make these great shows; be sure to support them by purchasing them when they come out on disc or renting them from iTunes, Netflix, Amazon, etc.

Excellent article, I knew about the legal factors in channels blocking video content but never considered all the bandwidth issues before.
Anyway, I’m writing because I’m very familiar with the Modify Headers method because I wrote a similar article about it, albeit focusing on watching one particular websites content.
And while the instructions here were exactly right when it was written they have changed slightly now, certainly the final steps are a bit different.
So if anybody does need a little extra help figuring out how to implement Modify Headers, you can always try here….

Excellent post. I am sure to try it out. However your method don’t work for CBS.com. You can use http://www.unotelly.com for CBS and others. However, though CBS if free, many channels are not. If anyone tests their service be sure to let me know. Thanks

The “Configuration” button is REALLY the “OPTIONS” tab at the top of the Modify Headers box. Click on OPTIONS and select ALWAYS ON. Every time you open your browser you have to open the Modify Headers box and enable the “X-Forwarded-For” rule.

From my experience proxies are not very reliable and kind of slow. VPN services tend to do a better job overall and are somewhat more safe. I`m using this VPN service for some time now, it`s pretty fast and user friendly.

It doesn’t seem to work for http://www.tudou.com and http://www.abcfamily.com
I tried to use an IP address from China to watch Chinese videos, however it still recognizes my IP address as where I am now. Could you help please?

That is true, this method does not work for all sites. You’ll have to use other methods for those sites. Some of the other commenters in this thread have mentioned some ideas that you may want to look at.

Hi, I need help, I try to watch video from univision.com witch is a Spanish website from USA, but this kind of extension is not working , also for cartoonnetwork.com and much more, please let me know how we can be able to watch video from univision.com
Thank you

Ethical use.. There’s no justification for blocking video access to a country just because well, they are in a different country. We’re all supposed to be equals aren’t we? Australians get shafted by tons of American websites, it’s fucked.

Those websites are just adhering to the distribution agreements they signed. The websites are not legally allowed to distribute that content beyond the borders of the country they bought the distribution rights for. If nobody in your country bought the distribution rights for that content then you need to lobby them to buy the rights so people in your country can watch the content. You can’t blame the website, they’re just following the law.